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RIP Pat Woodell

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Pat Woodell dies at 71; actress best known for 1960s sitcom 'Petticoat Junction'

Los Angeles Times
By David Colker
October 17, 2015

Actress Pat Woodell, who starred as one of a trio of sisters in the wholesome 1960s sitcom "Petticoat Junction" before she went on to be featured in a series of not-so-wholesome exploitation films, died Sept. 29 at her home in Fallbrook, Calif. She was 71.

Known as Patricia McDade off screen, she had battled cancer for more than 20 years, said her husband, Vern McDade.

She was born July 12, 1944, in Winthrop, Mass. Her initial aim in show business was to be a singer, and she had early gigs at resorts in the Catskills. In 1962, gossip columnist Harrison Carroll wrote, "Everybody wants to hear 18-year-old singer Pat Woodell."

Woodell, a statuesque brunette, was signed to a contract by Warner Bros., and her first network TV credit was on a 1962 episode of the western series "Cheyenne." She followed that up with appearances on "Hawaiian Eye" and "77 Sunset Strip," and had a role in a government-sponsored anti-communism drama, "Red Nightmare," narrated by Jack Webb.

Her best-known role came in the hit series "Petticoat Junction," set near the bucolic town of Hooterville. Many of the plots revolved around the misadventures of the three teenage daughters of widow Kate Bradley, played by veteran TV actress Bea Benaderet, as they tried to keep the slightly run-down Shady Rest Hotel afloat.

The show made its debut in 1963 on CBS, with Woodell playing Bobbie Jo, the smart, studious daughter. (The trio was rounded out by Linda Kaye Henning, who portrayed tomboy Betty Jo, and Jeannine Riley, who was boy-crazy Billie Jo.)

One of the better-known episodes that featured Woodell had her falling for a traveling-through beatnik type, played by Dennis Hopper. He spews over-the-top, angry verse that insults the townspeople. Yet a smitten Bobbie Jo tells him, "I think that was one of the most exciting poems I've ever heard." In the end, with her mother's help, she realizes he's more insane than artistic.

"The show has such a nostalgic note that it hits for so many people," Woodell said in an interview in the mid-2000s for a DVD compilation of the series. "Even today, after so many decades, I can be doing anything, anywhere in the world, by the way, and people will remember 'Petticoat Junction.'"

Woodell did some singing on the show — including in a Beatles parody group, the Ladybugs — with her on-screen sisters and the addition of actress Sheila Kuehl, now a Los Angeles County supervisor.

But Woodell grew tired of playing Bobbie Jo and left after two seasons of "Petticoat Junction," which ran until April 1970.

She had some success as a singer, including touring with comedian Jack Benny and recording an album, but stardom remained out of reach.

In the early 1970s she began appearing in low-budget exploitation films that thrived on nudity and violence, long before those were amply available on cable. Perhaps the best known of those films was the 1971 women's prison flick "The Big Doll House," which exclaimed in its trailer: "Their bodies were caged, but not their desires!"

"I have no delusions about this movie," Woodell said in a 1971 Chicago Tribune interview. But she didn't break through to more mainstream fare, and in 1973 gave up acting after attending a seminar developed by the controversial Werner Erhard. His est human potential programs were in vogue at the time, and Woodell went to work for his organization. She later co-founded a business consulting firm, retiring in 2013.

In addition to her husband — they were married in 1978 — she is survived by her stepfather, Joe Saveriano.


Pat Woodell (Patricia Joy Woodell)
Born: 7/12/1944, Winthrop, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Died: 9/29/2015, Fallbrook, California, U.S.A.

Pat Woodell’s western – actress:
Cheyenne (TV) – 1962  (Gail Evans)

RIP Yoná Magalhães

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Yoná Magalhães actress dies at age 80

UOL
10/20/2015

The actress Yoná Magalhães died at 10:05 am on Tuesday (20) in the Nursing Home San Jose, in the south of Rio de Janeiro.  According to the institution, Yona was admitted to the cardiology emergency room on September 18th and underwent surgery to correct heart failure.  After the procedure, she was admitted to the ICU, but postoperative complications resulted in her death.

She leaves her son Marcos Mendes, from her marriage to producer Luis Augusto Mendes.  The funeral of the actress is scheduled for the morning of Wednesday, in the Carmo Memorial.  The cremation ceremony will be at 13:30 at the same location.

Yona was the first girl in soap operas of TV Globo. She participated in dozens of novelas, the Globo, Bandeirantes and in Tupi, in addition to films like "Black God, White Devil" (1964), Glauber Rocha.

In an interview to UOL in 2014, 50 years after the release of "God and the Devil," Yona Magalhães said that her then husband, Luiz Augusto, was the one who convinced Glauber to give her for the role of Rosa, a suffering character that provided one of the most important performances of her career.

 "I believe that Glauber had another actress in mind, but found himself taken to accept me, stroking over his ability as a director than my talent and he was right. It created Rosa and could cause a budding actress, although have to be professional, to conduct a great performance, "said the actress.

Yona was part of the cast of the soap opera "Tropical Paradise", "Senhora do Destino", "The Daughters of the Mother", "The Next Victim,""My Well, my Evil", "Tieta" and "Roque Santeiro" and series "Tapas & Kisses", "Heavy Load", "Engraçadinha" and "the devil to pay in the backlands."  Her last work was on TV in "Good Blood" in 2013.

Artists who lived and worked with Yona mourned her death.  "I'm very sad, I think it is a tremendous loss because besides being an exceptional actress, she was a pioneer. Unfortunately now we have lost the great Yona Magalhães. All Yona touched, everything was exceptional, it's terrible, one exceptional person, loyal friend, generous, very dedicated, always there, always willing to help, "said Juca de Oliveira to GloboNews.

 Novels and "Playboy"

Born in Lins de Vasconcelos, on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro, on August 7, 1935, Yoná Magalhães Gonçalves joined the artistic life by chance, to help the family when her father became unemployed.

After small roles in the 1950s, she got a contract with Radio Tupi.  Then participated in soap operas and the Grand Theatre of TV Tupi, in addition to touring the country with the plays "Love is Pink Candy" and "Society in Baby-Doll" in 1962.

Hired in 1965 by TV Globo, Yona was among the first cast of the station, carrying the novel "I Buy This Woman" (1966), Gloria Magadan as romantic pair Carlos Alberto.  "She also worked in other novelas by the same author as" The Sheik of Agadir "," The Shadow of Rebecca, "" The Forbidden Man "," The Cat of Mink "and" The Bridge of Sighs ".

In 1971, Yona and Carlos Alberto moved to Tupi, where she acted in "Simply Maria" by Walter Avancini.  Back to Globe the following year, she made "A Rose With Love,""The Demigod", "Magic Mirror" and "Warning Sign".  In São Paulo, in the 1980s, she made "Pale Horse", "The Immigrant,""Toffee Apple" in Bandeirantes and returned to Globe to live americanófila Maria delle Grazie in "Love is repaid with love" in 1984.

In an interview with Channel Live in 2013 (see video below), Yona remembered her career moments and a curiosity about "A Rose With Love," in which she disputed with Marilia Pera for the attention of Paul Goulart: "Daniel Son was teasing me. At the time of 'A Rose with Love', he said he wanted me blonde, asked to continue brunette, but he refused, saying,... the Naira is blonde, blonde I had to do and saw the pictures today think beautiful Daniel had a tenth of reason, had to paint to become more beautiful, "said Yona.

In 1985, she joined the cast of one of the novels most successful in the history of TV Globo, "Roque Santeiro" by Dias Gomes and Aguinaldo Silva, as Matiles, the owner of the club where they worked the Ninon dancers (Claudia Raia) and Rosaly (Oliveira de Isis).  The success of character earned an invitation to grace the cover of "Playboy" at age 50.

In the 1990s, she made four novels Walther Negrao: "Stag Night", "Angel of Me,""Once Upon a Time ..." and "Vila Madalena".  In "Senhora do Destino", 2004, played Flavian, mother of Giovanni unforgettable Improtta, played by José Wilker.  Then came yet "Tropical Paradise", "China Business,""Cat's Cradle" and "Good Blood".


MAGALHAES, Yoná (Yoná Magalhães Gonçalves)
Born: 8/7/1935, Lins de Vasconcelos, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Died: 10/20/2015, San Jose, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Yoná Magalhães’ western – actress:
Black God, White Devil – 1964 (Rosa)

RIP Marty Ingels

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Actor and comedian Marty Ingels dies at 79

The talent agent was married to Shirley Jones for nearly 40 years

Entertainment Weekly
By Shirley Li
October 22, 2015

Marty Ingels, the comic and voice-over actor who later became one of the industry’s most powerful talent agents and was married to actress Shirley Jones, died of a massive stroke Wednesday at the age of 79 at Tarzana Medical Center in Tarzana, California.

The goofy, raspy-voiced comedian was born Martin Ingerman in Brooklyn in 1936, and after a short service in the Army, moved on to become an actor, working at the Pasadena Playhouse in Los Angeles. He first charmed audiences in the 1960s when he starred alongside John Astin in the short-lived ABC comedy I’m Dickens, He’s Fenster, a series about a pair of oddball carpenters that went on to become a cult favorite. He appeared on the silver screen as well, landing roles in The Picasso Summer and If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium.

The next decade would see Ingels transition his comedic chops into a slew of voice-over roles, landing parts in commercials, cartoons (he voiced AutoCat in the series Motormouse and Autocat in 1969), and even the arcade game-inspired Pac-Man series in 1982, in which he played — who else? — the eponymous, notorious chompster. During that time, he began another career as well, opening a talent representation firm called Ingels Inc. There, he worked with actors like John Wayne, Orson Welles (he helped Welles land the Paul Masson Wines commercials), and Marlon Brando, with whom he tussled with over the actor’s infamous decline of an Oscar for his work in The Godfather.

And then there’s Shirley Jones, his wife of nearly 40 years. The mismatched pair (“I was a Jewish kid from Brooklyn and she was Miss America,” Ingels once said) met in 1974 at a party thrown by actor Michael Landon, married in 1977, and chronicled their marriage in their co-written autobiography Shirley & Marty: An Unlikely Love Story in 1990. The couple often made appearances together. In 2009, Ingels accompanied Jones on her visit to The View, during which his sense of humor was on full display: He arrived wearing a Dr. Hannibal Lecter mask and happily took out a prop flask to guzzle at the end of the segment, prompting cheers from the audience. “He drives me crazy,” Jones jokingly told the co-hosts. “Actually, he’s a little quieter at home, but you give him an audience, one person, and it’s all over.” At that, Ingels laughed.

Over the course of his career, Ingels made frequent guest appearances on popular TV shows, from The Dick Van Dyke Show and Bewitched to Baywatch and Murder, She Wrote. And he never stopped working: Most recently, he appeared on CSI and New Girl, lending his comedic chops to every role.

Ingels is survived by Jones, three stepsons (from Jones’ earlier marriage), a niece, and 12 grandchildren.


INGELS, Marty (Martin Ingerman)
Born: 3/9/1936, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 10/21/2015, Tarzana, California, U.S.A.

Marty Ingels’ westerns – actor:
Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1998 (Murray)
Forgiven This Gun 4 Hire – 2015 (Joe)

RIP Yilmaz Köksal

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Yilmaz Köksal has closed his eyes to life!

Yilmaz Köksal lost his life. Yeşilçam'ın Yilmaz Köksal one of the Turkish cinema legends is mourned by his many fans

Milliyet
10/23/2015

Yilmaz Köksal one the most famous names of Turkish cinema, died in the hospital for treatment of cancer.

Director Nazif Bronze, AA said in a statement to reporters, expressed Köksal died around 22:00 in the evening, the news received from famous actor’s son.

Yilmaz noted that one of the most recent works of director Köksal Bronze, I shot a movie called "Dream Pursuit. In the past year, Köksal was in physical distress caused by making a very dangerous stunt. He’s been in the hospital for the last year. He was lively and playful watching films, our laughter will turn to tears now, "he said.

Nazif Tunc, 76 year-old artist a week transferring is in intensive care, "a unique player for us, loyal friend, was one who likes to do good deeds and will not be forgotten by the people. The Turkish nation, give thanks to the head of the family of Turkish cinema," he said.

Who was Yilmaz Köksal?

Yilmaz Köksal has long struggled with cancer, a Turkish theater and film actor was. He was born on July 15 in 1939 in Kirsehir. Finishing elementary school, he attended in Arsenal Osmaniye Istanbul at the Art Institute. He traveled around Europe for a while, working on ships.

Tunc Basaran cinema adaptation, Orhan Kemal "Morteza" at work "Dubara" and passed into cinema history by playing the role.

After playing for a long time secondary roles Yilmaz Köksal 1970 directed by Cetin Faith's "Ceko" began his leading roles in the film. With the success of the film he won the admiration of the people, he became one of the most popular actors in the history of adventure films and cinema.

Mehmet Arslan's screenplay was written by and starring Canan and share it with Perver "Aybiç Kurt Girl", since that period is between Turkey AmAsInIn ürettigi rare cult films. (Turkish nomad barbarians in the treacherous attack in the movie, they kill everybody).

Yilmaz Köksal Aybiç Turkish hero of the "wolf girl" swear to avenge the massacre.) He had appeared in 182 films from 1965 until 2005 and also wrote several screenplays. Cinema and movies with the proliferation of private television series continued his acting career.

Struggling because of the cancer, he died on Thursday October 22, 2015. Yilmaz Koksal was 76 years old.


KOKSAL, Yilmaz
Born: 7/15/1939, Adana, Turkey
Died: 10/22/2015, Istanbul, Turkey

Yilmaz Köksal’s westerns – actor:
Kader bagi – 1967
Cango – korkusuz  adam – 1967
Maskeli besler – 1968 (Seytan)
Maskelli  beslerin donusu – 1968
Çeko – 1970 (Çeko)
Zagor – 1970
Cilginlar ordusu - 1971
Vahsetin esirleri - 1971
Daglin oglu – 1972
Kan ve kin – 1972
Dag kurdu – 1973
Yahsi Bati – The Ottoman Cowboys – 2009 (Sheriff Çeko)

RIP Rico Alaniz

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RIP Rico Alaniz

Facebook
Wake Up America
March 9, 2015

Earlier this evening March 9th, 2015 at age 95 my wife's grandfather Americo Zorilla Alaniz passed away peacefully in his home in California.

Rico was born on October 25, 1919 in Juarez, Mexico and was an American Actor on the big screen as well as television, and even plays with more than 92 Credits over a very long career beginning on the big screen in 1951 but his acting career began in 1947.
Rico was the last surviving actor from the main cast in the Original Magnificent 7 films. He worked in many films including the 1992 Film Final Analysis (1992) Staring Richard Gere and Kim Basinger and introducing Uma Thurman.

On TV he featured roles in the ABC series - The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, The Adventures of Kit Carson, Bonanza, Daniel Boone, The Wild Wild West, Gun Smoke, Zorro, and many many more.

He was most proud of his work in Kraft Theater as an actor, a director a coach, a teacher, and mentor for many well known house hold names like Eric Roberts, Elvis Presely, Sylvester Stallone and many more. He was life long friends with Yul Brynner, and Steve Mcqueen

R.I P., You'll be missed by many, Rico.


ALANIZ, Rico (Americo Zorilla Alaniz)
Born: 10/25/1919, Juarez Mexico
Died:  3/9/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Rico Alzniz’s westerns – actor:
The Adventures of Kit Carson (TV) – 1951, 1953 (Murietta, James Monari, Roberto Avial, Luciano Mesconti)
Viva Zapata! – 1952 (guard)
Column South – 1953 (Trooper Chavez)
Conquest of Cochise – 1953 (Pedro)
Wings of the Hawk – 1953 (Captain Gomez)
Drum Beat – 1954 (medicine man)
Siege at Red River – 1954 (Yellow Hawk)
Jubilee Trail – 1954 (Spaniard Captain)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1954 (Miguel)
The Last Command – 1955 (Tomas)
The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1955 (Gray Wolf)
Stagecoach to Fury – 1956 (Miguel Torres)
Buffalo Bill Jr. (TV) – 1956 (Ramon Chavez)
The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin (TV) – 1956 (Big Elk, Don Valdez)
Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1957, 1962 (Sebastian, Lopez)
26 Men (TV) – 1957 (Juan Morales, Benton)
Zorro (TV) – 1957 (Private Ortega)
The Toughest Gun in Tombstone – 1958 (Fernandez)
Maverick (TV) – 1958 (Fernando)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1958 (Small Cloud)
Frontier Doctor (TV) – 1959 (Renaldo)
Have Gun - Will Travel (TV) – 1959 (tall rancher)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Joe Riva, Mr. Cousin)
The Magnificent Seven – 1960 (Sotero)
Laramie (TV) – 1960 (Manuel Ortega)
Outlaws (TV) – 1960 (Captain of Rurales)
Bronco (TV) – 1962 (Rico Candido)
Bonanza (TV) – 1962, 1964, 1970 (Miguel, Juan Pacheco, bandit, Ricardo)
The Virginian (TV) – 1963 (bandido leader)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1963, 1968 (El Pinon, young Padre, blacksmith)
Temple Houston (TV) – 1963 (Angel Chavez)
Rawhide (TV) – 1964, 1965 (Garcia Flores, Pedro)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1966 (Jacobo)
The Monroes (TV) – 1966 (renegade leader)
Winchester 73 (TV) – 1967 (Mexican)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1967, 1969, 1970 (Ricardo, El Gato, Armando, Jorge Martinez)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1969 (Crooked Hand)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1969 (Mexican agent)

RIP Maureen O'Hara

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Actor Maureen O’Hara dies aged 95
Family confirms ‘Quiet Man’ star passed away peacefully today in her sleep

The Irish Times
October 24, 2015

The actor Maureen O’Hara, famed for her flaming red hair and her role in The Quiet Man, has died aged 95.

Her family confirmed in a statement that she passed away peacefully in her sleep today.

Born in Ranelagh, Dublin in 1920, O’Hara was the eldest of six children in the FitzSimons family. The Abbey Theatre-trained actor became a naturalised US citizen in 1946 and held dual Irish-US citizenship.

Her early films included My Irish Molly and The Hunchback of Notre Dame, but it was for director John Ford’s The Quiet Man (1952), in which she starred opposite John Wayne, that she will be best remembered.

“It is with a sad heart that we share the news that Maureen O’Hara passed away today in her sleep of natural causes,” a statement from the Fitzsimons family read.

“Maureen was our loving mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and friend. She passed peacefully surrounded by her loving family as they celebrated her life listening to music from her favorite movie, The Quiet Man.”

The family said that as an actor, O’Hara brought “unyielding strength and sudden sensitivity to every role she played”.

“Her characters were feisty and fearless, just as she was in real life. She was also proudly Irish and spent her entire lifetime sharing her heritage and the wonderful culture of the Emerald Isle with the world. Later in life, she became the first woman president of a commercially scheduled airline in the United States. ”

She had, they added, remained a champion of the arts, aviation and all things Irish throughout her life and never lost her joy and wonder of these pursuits.

“As much as Maureen cherished her privacy, she always appreciated the expressions of good will from people around the world and from all walks of life. She especially loved it when children recognised her from her role in Miracle on 34th Street and asked her: ‘Are you the lady who knows Santa Claus?’ She always answered: ‘Yes I am. What would you like me to tell him?’”

“While we mourn the loss of a very wonderful woman, we also celebrate her remarkable life and hope that it serves as an example to young people around the world, especially in Ireland, to work hard to make their dreams come true and to always have the courage to stand up for themselves.

“For those who may ask what they can do to honour Maureen, we have a simple request: visit Ireland one day and think of her.”

Ms O’Hara’s beloved west Cork home was sold just last month for about €1.6 million.

The scenic coastal home on 35 acres was placed on the market in October last year with an asking price of €2.3 million after O’Hara moved permanently to the US to be close to her family.

O’Hara was inducted into the Irish America Hall of Fame at an event in Wexford in 2011.

She was also awarded an honorary Oscar last year.


O’HARA,Maureen (Maureen FitzSimons)
Born: 8/17/1920, Ranelagh, County Dublin, Ireland
Died: 10/24/2015, Boise, Idaho, U.S.A.

Maureen O’Hara’s westerns:
Buffalo Bill – 1944 (Louisa Frederici Cody)
Comanche Territory – 1950 (Katie Howard)
Rio Grande – 1950 (Mrs. Kathleen Yorke)
Kangaroo – 1952 (Dell McGuire)
The Redhead from Wyoming – 1953 (Kate Maxwell)
War Arrow – 1953 (Elaine Corwin)
The Deadly Companions – 1961 (Kit Tildon)
McLintock!  - 1963 (Katherine Gilhooley McLintock)
The Rare Breed – 1966 (Martha Price)
Big Jake – 1971(Martha McCandles)

RIP Charles Rosher Jr.

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Charles Rosher Jr., Cinematographer on Robert Altman Films, Dies at 80

Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
10/27/2015

The son of Mary Pickford's favorite director of photography also worked on 'The Baby Maker,''The Onion Field' and 'Semi-Tough.'

Charles Rosher Jr., who served as the cinematographer on the back-to-back Robert Altman films 3 Women and A Wedding, has died. He was 80.

Rosher, whose credits include the gritty The Onion Field (1979) and Michael Ritchie’s football movie Semi-Tough (1977), died Oct. 14 of lung cancer at his home in Beverly Hills, his daughter, Jenna, told The Hollywood Reporter.

His father was Charles Rosher, one of the most influential cinematographers in film history. A favorite of actress Mary Pickford and a founding member of the American Society of Cinematographers, he received Oscars for Sunrise (1927) — at the very first Academy Awards ceremony — and for The Yearling (1946), and he worked on the classics Annie Get Your Gun (1950) and Show Boat (1951).

A graduate of Beverly Hills High School, the younger Rosher was a film loader for director Edward Dmytryk on Raintree County (1957), starring Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor, and first assistant camera operator on a somewhat less prestigious project, Attack of the Giant Leeches (1959).

He served as a camera operator on the Richard Brooks action adventure The Professionals (1966) and on such TV shows as The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet, Mission: Impossible and Mannix before scoring his first director of photography credit, on Adam at Six A.M. (1970), starring Michael Douglas in his second movie.

The great DP Conrad Hall (In Cold Blood, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid) recommended Rosher to Altman when the director was searching for a cinematographer for 1977's 3 Women. (Hall and Rosher had collaborated on The Professionals.)

Rosher also worked on the dramatic Carol Burnett telefilm The Tenth Month (1979), which was directed by Joan Tewkesbury, Altman’s writer on Nashville (1975).

In addition to A Wedding (1978), Rosher did The Baby Maker (1970), directed by James Bridges; Pretty Maids All in a Row (1971), written by Gene Roddenberry; Robert Benton’s The Late Show (1977); Ritchie’s Nightwing (1979); Independence Day (1983); and Police Academy 6: City Under Siege (1989).

Survivors also include his wife Sharlyn and grandchildren Olivia and Juliette.


ROSHER Jr,. Charles (Charles Delaney Rosher)
Born: 1935, Beverly Hills, California, U.S.A.
Died: October 14, 2015 Beverly Hills, California, U.S.A.

Charles Rosher Jr’s westerns – cameraman, film loader:
Raintree County – 1957 [film loader]
The Professionals – 1966 [cameraman]
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (TV) – 1993 [cameraman]

RIP Bob Minkler

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Bob Minkler, Oscar Winner for Sound Mixing on ‘Star Wars,’ Dies at 78

Variety
By Carmel Dagan
October 28, 2015

Academy Award-winning sound mixer Robert Alan (Bob) Minkler died of respiratory failure at home in Oregon with his wife, Patty, at his side on October 11. He was 78.

Minkler won his Oscar in 1978 for best sound on the first film in the “Star Wars” franchise.

In a Hollywood career that spanned two decades, he worked on such films as “Easy Rider,” “The Black Stallion,” “Bull Durham,” “Mask,” “Urban Cowboy,” “Rocky II,” “Hair” and “Tron,” for which he was Oscar-nominated along with his brother Lee Minkler and his nephew, three-time Oscar winner Michael Minkler.

Born in 1937 in Glendale, Calif., to audio pioneer Lee Darrell Minkler and Lorraine Jones Minkler, Bob spent many years as a musician and vocalist, touring with Nat King Cole for a time. He found his way back to the film business and began his career working alongside his brothers Donald Minkler and Lee Minkler.

He moved to Hawaii to raise his three sons Marcus, Daniel and Christian. Additional survivors are his grandchildren Michael, Mia, Jacob, Matthew, Kyle and Brooke. Private services will be held in Hawaii.


MINKLER, Bob (Robert Alan Minkler)
Born: 1937, Glendale, California, U.S.A.
Died: 10/11/2015, Waldport, Oregon, U.S.A.

Bob Minkler’s western – sound mixer:
The Young Riders (TV) – 1989-1991

RIP Julia Jones

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Julia Jones obituary
Prolific and talented writer of dialogue for television dramas and sitcoms

The Guardian
By Michael Coveney
October 29, 2015

Julia Jones, who has died aged 92, was a prominent and versatile television writer for more than 40 years, contributing one-off dramas to both the BBC’s Play for Today series and ITV’s Armchair Theatre, making adaptations of Our Mutual Friend and Anne of Green Gables, and writing episodes of The Duchess of Duke Street and sharply turned sitcoms such as Take Three Girls and Moody and Pegg in the 1970s.

Jones, who hailed from a modest Liverpool background, trained as an actor and toured with Joan Littlewood’s Theatre Workshop immediately after the second world war. She took up writing as an economic imperative: while raising a young family, her husband, the actor Edmond “Benny” Bennett, was afflicted with facial cancer which, in the days when the effects of radiotherapy were more haphazard, developed into bone necrosis; he was unable to carry on working.

Encouraged by her friend Donald Churchill, the actor and writer, and his wife, the actor Pauline Yates, she submitted to the BBC in 1965 a short play, The Navigators, a story of a dowdy librarian falling in love with a labourer digging the road outside her window. This led to other slots in the BBC’s Wednesday Play series. She made her name as one of the writers of BBC’s Take Three Girls in 1969, a well-observed and beautifully acted sitcom, one of the BBC’s first series in colour, with three flat-sharing “swinging” 60s archetypes – the actress left holding the baby (and the bills) by a departing husband, an aspirant business professional, and the disorganised loser (played, respectively, by Susan Jameson, Angela Down and Liza Goddard).

Jones found that writing dialogue came to her as easily as breathing, and she was almost unstoppably productive. She was a small and wiry figure, gregarious and always full of stories, and known for her steely determination, what her family thought of as a will of iron. And, through her family background, she was always on the left in politics, with a highly developed sense of social injustice, supplying some of her early stories – though she found writing prose much harder than dialogue – to the Daily Worker.

She was born in West Derby, Liverpool, and grew up in the Everton district, one of four children of Harvey Sykes Jones, a manager for a meat importing business, and his wife, Eva (nee Collins), who died when Julia was 10. Harvey was of Welsh descent, and played the organ in church, while Eva’s family were of Irish origins.

When Eva died, Harry and the children moved to Aintree where he married again; Julia was never close to her stepmother, Rachel. She left school to work as a wages clerk in the Dunlop rubber company and, when war broke out, joined the women’s branch of the Auxiliary Territorial Service, travelling all over Britain and developing a keen interest in amateur dramatics.

She was diffident about going further in the theatre until, about to be demobbed, she saw that the film producer Alexander Korda was offering scholarships for ex-servicemen and women at Rada in London. She applied, successfully, and found herself, in October 1946, in the same classes as Michael Redgrave. She felt ill at ease, though, “just a girl from Liverpool” as she put it, to find herself among other young women for whom the place was a sort of finishing school.

When Littlewood, who was based in Manchester after the war, wrote to the registrar at Rada in search of likely actors, Julia auditioned and joined the Theatre Workshop in 1948, going on tour with them to Czechoslovakia and Sweden and to the Edinburgh festival of 1949. Productions at this time included Ewan MacColl’s The Other Animals, set in a concentration camp, Johnny Noble, a working-class ballad opera about unemployment and the Spanish civil war, and rewrites of classics by Lorca and Molière. She also played in a version of Alice in Wonderland that visited the Theatre Royal Stratford East in January 1950, before Littlewood acquired the place as her permanent home.

She married Bennett, a fellow Workshop actor, on leaving the company later in 1950, and acted in repertory theatre in Liverpool and Canterbury. She toured, with her young family, and played the West End, with Benny, in Alun Owen’s Progress to the Park. She also appeared on television in Emergency Ward 10 and Z Cars. The family settled into a house in Earlsfield, south London.

Bennett took small parts with the Royal Shakespeare Company but his illness accelerated and so, therefore, did Julia’s writing. She wrote for the leading TV producers of the 1970s – including Kenith Trodd and Tony Garnett – and her Plays for Today featured great roles for Rachel Roberts, Rosalind Ayres and Margery Mason. In the 1974 sitcom Moody and Pegg (the title characters played by Derek Waring and Judy Cornwell), she and Churchill wrote an entertainingly antagonistic double act for a divorced antiques dealer and an unmarried civil servant who each thought he/she owned a valid lease on their resentfully shared apartment.

With Churchill again, she adapted Our Mutual Friend in 1976, with a fine cast led by Leo McKern as Mr Boffin (“he was of an overlapping, rhinoceros build, with folds in his cheeks, and his forehead, and his eyelids, and his lips, and his ears”), John McEnery as John Rokesmith and Jane Seymour as Bella Wilfer. The popularity of The Duchess of Duke Street, starring Gemma Jones, followed that of Upstairs Downstairs in its story of the cook who takes over the smart hotel as hierarchies in the class system give way, a story that would be continued in Downton Abbey over exactly the same Edwardian period.

West End success eluded her as a playwright, but she did make two notable incursions, with The Garden, directed by Vivian Matalon and starring Brian Deacon and Diana Coupland, at the Hampstead Theatre Club in 1972; and with Country Ways at the Bristol Old Vic in 1983. Bennett appeared in the latter. He died soon afterwards, in 1986. Still Julia turned out the series and adaptations, achieving great success with six episodes of Tom’s Midnight Garden by Philippa Pearce in 1989 and 12 episodes of The Famous Five by Enid Blyton in 1995, with a young, very watchable Jemima Rooper in the cast.

Julia bought a flat from Victoria Wood in Maida Vale, north-west London, in 1990. In 2006 she married a widower whom she had met on a cruise holiday: Derek Ballance was a retired chartered surveyor, they were both in their 80s, and they moved to north Oxford and, eventually, a retirement apartment in Painswick, Gloucestershire. Ballance died in February.

Jones is survived by two children from her first marriage, Thea and Harvey, and by three grandchildren.

• Julia Marian Jones, actor and television writer, born 27 March 1923; died 9 October 2015


JONES, Julia (Julia Marian Jones)
Born: 3/27/1923, West Derby, Liverpool, England, U.K.
Died: 10/9/2015, Painswick, Gloucestershire, England, U.K.

Julia Jones’s western – screenwriter:
The Campbells (TV) - (TV) – 1989

RIP Tex Rudolff

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Tex Rudloff, Sound Man on 'Taxi Driver' and 'Halloween,' Dies at 89

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
10/29/2015

He was an Oscar nominee for 'The Buddy Holly Story.' His son is two-time Academy Award winner Gregg Rudloff, a sound man, too.

Tex Rudloff, an Oscar-nominated sound man who worked on such 1970s classics as Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver, John Carpenter’s Halloween and Clint Eastwood’s The Outlaw Josey Wales, has died. He was 89.

Rudloff, who received his Oscar nomination for best sound for The Buddy Holly Story (1978), starring Gary Busey, died Oct. 10, his family announced.

Survivors include his son, Gregg Rudloff, a six-time Academy Award nominee who received best sound Oscars for Glory (1989) and The Matrix (1999). Like his father, he worked for Eastwood, collaborating with the director on many of his recent films, including Flags of Our Fathers (2006), J. Edgar (2011) and American Sniper (2014).

Tex Rudloff’s résumé also includes Sydney Pollack’s They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969), The Prisoner of Second Avenue (1975), The Warriors (1979), Norman Jewison’s ... And Justice for All, Buck Henry’s First Family (1980), Mel Brooks’ History of the World: Part I (1981) and Porky’s Revenge (1985).

Born Walter Cecil Rudloff on Aug. 8, 1926, in Coleman, Texas, he worked as a recordist in the machine room on the 1955 classical musical Oklahoma! and served as president of the Cinema Audio Society and treasurer of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences.


RUDOLFF, Tex(Walter Cecil Rudolff)
Born: 8/6/1926, Coleman, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 10/10/2015, Sherman Oaks, California, U.S.A.

Tex Rudolff’s westerns – sound recording mixer:
The Ballad of Cable Hogue – 1970
The Outlaw Josey Wales – 1976
Wanda Nevada – 1979
The Sacketts (TV) – 1976

RIP Hans Teuscher

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Hans Teuscher is dead
The actor died at 78

RP Online
October 31, 2015

The actor Hans Teuscher has died at the age of 78 years. He had died from cancer in Berlin on Saturday, said his agency Nicolai in Berlin.

Teuscher, who was born in 1937 in Dresden, came from a widely ramified family of actors. After the war he lived temporarily in the Allgäu, where he already came to the theater as a child. After graduating from the Higher School of Theatre Leipzig, he played as a member of inter alia, the Berliner Volksbühne, the Deutsches Theater Berlin and the Dresden State Theatre. He soon came to the film industry and worked in the GDR on dozens of productions.

1988 Teuscher went to West Germany and also played there on numerous stages. In Berlin he was seen among others at the Renaissance Theatre and in various musical productions of the theater of the West - for example, in "My Fair Lady" or "States as in Ancient Rome". He was widely known in West Germany including an episode in TV series Tatort and in numerous films in ARD and ZDF "Wer nicht schweigt, muss sterben".


TEUSCHER, Hans
Born: 4/10/1937, Dresden, Saxony, Germany
Died: 10/31/2015, Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Hans Teuscher’s westerns – voice actor:
Lucky Luke (TV) – 1991 [German voice of David Huddleston]
Don’t Come Knocking – 2004 [German voice of George Kennedy]
The Homesman – 2014 [German voice of Barry Corbin]

RIP Howard A. Anderson

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'Star Trek' Visual Effects Artist, Dies at 95

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
10/31/2015

He received an Oscar nomination for his work on the 1967 war film 'Tobruk.'

Howard A. Anderson Jr., an Oscar-nominated visual effects artist whose company did VFX work for the original Star Trek series, has died. He was 95.
Anderson died Sept. 27 of cardiac dysrhythmia in Ventura, Calif., his son, Howard A. Anderson III, told The Hollywood Reporter.

Anderson and Albert Whitlock shared an Oscar nom for their efforts on Arthur Hiller’s Tobruk (1967), a war drama that starred Rock Hudson and George Peppard.

In the 1960s, Anderson and his brother, Darrell A. Anderson, were running The Howard Anderson Co., an influential special effects outfit based on the Desilu lot. The firm had worked on I Love Lucy — Anderson Jr. had teamed with Desi Arnaz to get the shape of the heart just right for the show's opening —  and NBC's Star Trek was produced by Desilu.

The firm signed a deal to work on the 1964 Star Trek pilot episodes "The Cage" and "Where No Man Has Gone Before," and its contributions to the series included exterior shots of the USS Enterprise speeding through the stars and the effects associated with the phaser-beam weapons and the ship’s transporter.

The company was launched by their father, Howard A. Anderson, who did special effects for such movies as White Zombie (1932) and The Man in the Iron Mask (1939). It went on to create the opening titles for scores of memorable shows, including The Addams Family, The Andy Griffith Show, Get Smart, The Mod Squad, The Twilight Zone, Mission: Impossible, The Brady Bunch and Cheers.

Howard A. Anderson III eventually took over the operation; it closed in November 2004. 

Anderson Jr. received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards in 2007 and was given the President’s Award from the American Society of Cinematographers in 2004.

A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m. on Nov. 20 at Eternal Valley Memorial Park in Newhall, Calif.


ANDERSON, Howard A. (Howard Andrew Anderson)
Born: 3/31/1920, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Died: 9/27/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Howard A. Anderson’s westerns – cinematographer, SFX:
Riders of the Pony Express – 1949 [cinematographer]
Slaughter Trail – 1951 [SFX]

RIP Gregg Palmer

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R.I.P., GREGG PALMER (January 25, 1927 – October 31, 2015),

By Laura Wagner
11/1/2015

GREGG PALMER an actor best known for his roles in westerns. Born Palmer Lee in San Francisco, he served in World War II in the Army Air Corps. After his 1946 discharge, he became a radio announcer, and then the strapping 6’3” hunk secured work as a bouncer, a truck driver, and in construction. In 1949 he auditioned for Al Capp and Busby Berkeley for a projected NBC-TV series based on Capp’s comic strip LI’L ABNER; he played Li'l Abner and Marilyn Monroe was his Daisy Mae. After Palmer played an uncredited role at Paramount (MY FRIEND IRMA GOES WEST), he was signed to a Universal-International contract in 1951. “We would maybe have a featured role in a picture,” he said, “maybe we would star, maybe we would do a little cameo, but we were working. They were good and happy days.” He was billed Palmer Lee until 1953; henceforth, he went by the name Gregg Palmer. During the fifties, until the early 1980s, he appeared in film roles of varying size (sometimes uncredited), for U-I and others. One of his rare leads was 1957's ZOMBIES OF MORA TAU. He was a particular favorite of John Wayne’s, appearing in a few movies with the Duke. Palmer would get most of his best roles on television, finding his niche in westerns, but guesting with regularity on tons of series, often multiple times: THE PUBLIC DEFENDER, STORIES OF THE CENTURY (as Jack Slade), HIGHWAY PATROL, SERGEANT PRESTON OF THE YUKON, SKY KING, THE TEXAN, THE DANNY THOMAS SHOW, CIMARRON CITY, THE LINEUP, THE RESTLESS GUN, 26 MEN, STATE TROOPER, SEA HUNT, WORLD OF GIANTS, SHOTGUN SLADE, THE MILLIONAIRE, SURFSIDE 6, WAGON TRAIN, LAWMAN, SUGARFOOT, THE UNTOUCHABLES, THE ROARING 20'S, BRONCO, CHEYENNE, HAVE GUN - WILL TRAVEL, LARAMIE, 77 SUNSET STRIP, RAWHIDE, THE BIG VALLEY, BRANDED, GET SMART, THE LONG, HOT SUMMER, LAREDO, GOMER PYLE – U.S.M.C., TARZAN, THE HIGH CHAPARRAL, MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE, CIMARRON STRIP, STAR TREK, THE WILD WILD WEST, BONANZA, DEATH VALLEY DAYS, THE VIRGINIAN, CANNON, ALIAS SMITH AND JONES, THE NIGHT STALKER, GUNSMOKE, QUINCY M.E., and many others. He was also briefly a regular on THE LIFE AND LEGEND OF WYATT EARP (1961). When Clayton Moore was having contractual issues, Palmer was approached to take over the lead on television’s THE LONE RANGER, on which he had guested in 1954. In 1959, he was also offered the role of Tarzan on screen. Palmer turned both chances down. As the years went by, his clean-cut good looks grew into a reflection of his nickname, “Grizzly,” and his wild-and-woolly appearance made him ideal for his many rugged characters, in particular his role as mountain man Jim Bridger in 1977’s two-part WALT DISNEY'S WONDERFUL WORLD OF COLOR presentation of "Kit Carson and the Mountain Man." His last role was in the 1982 television miniseries THE BLUE AND THE GRAY. Palmer, a widower since 1999, lived in retirement in Encino, California, played golf, did much for charity, and was interested in Native-American history. He was a solid featured player, never a star, but someone reliable enough to get the job done. Palmer essayed his parts with conviction and a dedication to his craft, finding his forte in westerns, a genre that was his favorite.


PALMER, Gregg (Palmer Lee)
Born: 1/25/1927, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Died: 10/31/2015, Encino, California, U.S.A.

Gregg Palmer’s westerns – actor:
The Battle at Apache Pass – 1952 (Joe Bent)
The Cimarron Kid – 1952 (Grat Dalton)
The Raiders – 1952 (Marty Smith)
Column South – 1953 (Chalmers)
The Redhead from Wyoming – 1953 (Hal Jessup)
Taza, Son of Cochise – 1954 (Captain Burnett)
The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1954 (Stanley Ammons)
The Adventures of Champion (TV) – 1955, 1956 (Jack Preston, Al)
Stories of the Century (TV) – 1955 (Jack Slade)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969 (John Brewster,
      Randall, Gabe, Fred, Shunar, Leach, Jacob Hamlin, Orrin Porter Rockwell)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1956-1961 (Deputy Bill Tillman, Tom McLowery)
Sergeant Preston of the Yukon (TV) – 1956 (Ed McQuade)
Revolt at Fort Laramie – 1957 (Captain James 'Jamie' Tenslip)
Broken Arrow (TV) – 1957 (Lieutenant Fielding)
Tales of the Texas Rangers (TV) – 1957 (Pete Hackett)
Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1957-1961 (Jeff Anderson, deputy, Steger)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1957, 1960, 1962 (Groton, Paul Dawson, Raleigh, Calso)
Buckskin (TV) – 1958 (Jaeckel)
Frontier Doctor (TV) – 1958 (Charlie Pierce)
Fury (TV) – 1958 (Deputy Barry Carver)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1958, 1960, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1966. 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972  (Harry, Hulbert
     Strunk, Wells, Collie Fletcher, Jake, Doak, Sheriff Jackson, blacksmith, Herk, Deputy Reed,
     Fry, Clete Davis, Wales, Benson, Bodine, Nicols, Guthrie, Simeon Reed
Jefferson Drum (TV) – 1958 (Grant)
The Restless Gun (TV) – 1958, 1959 (Joe Kruger, Jim Carter, Bill Clayton)
Sky King (TV) – 1958 (Frank Kinnard)
The Texan (TV) – 1958 (card player)
26 Men (TV) – 1958, 1959 (Ed Braddock, Ranger Andrew Shoreman, Ranger Edie Graham
Cimarron City (TV) – 1959 (Tom Hiller)
Have Gun - Will Travel (TV) – 1959, 1960, 1962 (drunk, Brogan, Ben Mattock, Sheriff
Pony Express (TV) – 1959
Riverboat (TV) – 1959 (Lieutenant Peterson)
Shotgun Slade (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Dolph Peterson, marshal)
Five Guns to Tombstone - 1960 (Mel Dixon)
Lawman (TV) – 1960 (Tracy McNeil)
Overland Trail – 1960 (Will Purdue)
The Deputy (TV) – 1960 (Tulley)
Hotel de Paree (TV) – 1960 (Cooper)
Laramie (TV) – 1960, 1962, 1963 (Duke Walker, Chuck Logan)
The Man from Blackhawk (TV) – 1960 (Gil Harrison)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1960 (Captain McHenry)
The Comancheros – 1961 (Emil Bouvier)
Gunfight - 1961 (Brad Santley)
Cheyenne (TV) – 1961, 1962 (Dillard, Nick, Hal Walton)
Outlaws (TV) – 1961 (Heff)
The Tall Man (TV) – 1961 (Truman Blanchard)
Two Faces West (TV) - 1961 (Cowlin)
Bronco (TV) – 1962 (Wes, Colton, Lieutenant Ames)
Temple Houston (TV) – 1963
Advance to the Rear – 1964 (gambler)
The Quick Gun – 1964 (Donovan)
Bonanza (TV) – 1964, 1967, 1968, 1969 (Gannett, Wells, Muley, Terrell, Benson)
The Virginian (TV) – 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1969, 1970 (Sunday, Cal, Peters, Ed Sticks,
     sheriff, Boak, O’Shea)
Shenandoah – 1965 - (guard)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1965 (Mel Coombs)
Branded (TV) - 1965 (Doc)
Laredo (TV) – 1965, 1966 (Curly, Sergeant Mason)
The Loner (TV) – 1965 (Adjutant)
Rawhide (TV) – 1965 (Mace)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1965, 1967, 1968 (Thaddeus, Sheriff Jonas Bolt, bartender)
The Rare Breed – 1966 (Rodenbush)
The Legend of Jesse James (TV) – 1966 (Moose Walters)
Cimarron Strip (TV) - 1967, 1968 (Rocky, Buford, Webber)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1968 (Colonel)
Smith! – 1969 (Sergeant, Court Bailiff)
The Undefeated – 1969 – (Parker)
Chisum – 1970 – (Karl Riker)
Cutter's Trail (TV) - 1970 (Oakes)
Menace on the Mountain (TV) – 1970 (posse bushwacker)
Rio Lobo – 1970 – (Pete)
Big Jake – 1971 – (John Goodfellow)
Life Is Tough, Eh Providence? – 1972 (Hurricane Smith)
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1972 (Fermin)
Nichols (TV) – 1972 (Burt)
Here We Go Again, Eh Providence? – 1973 (The Hurricane Kid)
The New Daughters of Joshua Cabe - 1976
The Shootist – 1976 – (burly man)
Kit Carson and the Mountain Men (TV) – 1977 (Jim Bridger)
How the West Was Won (TV) – 1978 (Loman)
Go West, Young Girl (TV) – 1978 (Payne)
Hot Lead and Cold Feet 1978 - (Jeff)
True Grit (TV) – 1978 (Slatter)
The Blue and the Grey (TV) – 1982 (Bull Run Colonel)
 Wyatt Earp: Return to Tombstone (TV) - 1994 (Tom McLowery)

RIP Fred Thompson

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U.S. senator and actor Fred Thompson dies at 73

Los Angeles Times
By Associated Press
November 1, 2015

Fred Thompson, a folksy former Republican U.S. senator from Tennessee who appeared in feature films and television including a role on "Law & Order," died Sunday, his family said. He was 73.

Thompson, at 6-foot-6  with a booming voice, appeared in at least 20 motion pictures. His credits include "In the Line of Fire,"''The Hunt for Red October,"''Die Hard II" and "Cape Fear." By the early 1990s, Thompson said he had become bored with his 10-year stint in Hollywood and wanted to go into public service. That's when he headed back to Nashville and launched his Senate campaign. A man of many roles in life and on the screen, he was a lawyer by training and also once served as chief minority counsel during the Senate Watergate hearings.

The family statement said Thompson died in Nashville following a recurrence of lymphoma.

"It is with a heavy heart and a deep sense of grief that we share the passing of our brother, father and grandfather who died peacefully in Nashville," it said. "Fred was the same man on the floor of the Senate, the movie studio, or the town square of ... his home."

Thompson, a lawyer, alternated between politics and acting much of his adult life. Once regarded as a rising star in the Senate, he retired from that seat when his term expired in January 2003.

See the most-read stories this hour >>

"I simply do not have the heart for another six-year term," Thompson said in a statement at the time. "Serving in the Senate has been a tremendous honor, but I feel that I have other priorities that I need to attend to."

However, he returned to politics in 2007 by announcing he would seek the Republican presidential nomination. But he dropped out in January 2008 after faring poorly in the early caucuses and primaries. "I hope that my country and my party have benefited from our having made this effort," Thompson said at the time.

After leaving the race, he campaigned extensively for his party's presidential nominee, John McCain, then sought support to become chairman of the Republican National Committee but quit that quest after a few months.

Thompson took stock of his life after the January 2002 death of his daughter, Elizabeth Thompson Panici, 38, following an accidental prescription drug overdose.

Thompson's rise to the Senate was atypical. He had never before held public office, but he overwhelmingly won a 1994 special election for Democrat Al Gore's old Senate seat after connecting with voters. In 1996 he easily won a six-year term.

Thompson's key prop was a red pickup truck that he used to crisscross the state throughout the campaign. In the end, Thompson captured 60 percent of the vote against then-Democratic Rep. Jim Cooper.

"He's got a little pizazz, he's got a sense of purpose and he's got an independent streak," Lamar Alexander said shortly after winning an election to succeed Thompson in the Senate.

Alexander, the Republican senator, said Sunday that Thompson would be greatly missed: "Very few people can light up the room the way Fred Thompson did. He used his magic as a lawyer, actor, Watergate counsel, and United States senator to become one of our country's most principled and effective public servants."

The son of a car salesman, Thompson was born in Sheffield, Alabama, and grew up in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, where he was a star athlete. He was 17 when he married Sarah Lindsey. The couple, who divorced in 1985, lived in public housing for a year as newlyweds.

Thompson graduated in 1964 from Memphis State University — now the University of Memphis — and earned his law degree from Vanderbilt University in 1967. To pay for school, he worked at a bicycle plant, post office and motel.

Thompson went on to become a lawyer in Nashville. In 1969, he became an assistant U.S. attorney, then volunteered in 1972 to work on the re-election campaign of former Republican Sen. Howard Baker. A year later, Baker selected Thompson to be chief minority counsel on the committee investigating the Watergate scandal.

Afterward, Thompson returned to Tennessee and represented Marie Ragghianti, the head of the Tennessee Parole Board who was fired in 1977 after exposing a pardon-selling scheme.

Ragghianti won reinstatement and her case was made into a 1985 movie titled "Marie," based on the 1983 book "Marie: A True Story," by Peter Maas. The producers asked Thompson to play himself, and the role launched his acting career.

Thompson once called the Senate a "remarkable place" but, like Hollywood, said there was "frustration connected with it."

He said he was disappointed the Governmental Affairs Committee didn't get more time in 1997 to investigate the fund-raising practices of the 1996 presidential election.

Some thought his high-profile role as chairman of the hearings could launch a presidential bid. That did not materialize in 2000 after the hearings were dismissed as political theater.

"They ran me for a while and then they took me out of the race, and all the time I was kind of a bystander,"Thompson said in 2002 about speculation over his presidential prospects two years earlier.

Nevertheless, he won praise from some for his commitment to better government.

"He has a real dedication to a lot of the nuts and bolts government reform issues that others just don't care about," Norm Ornstein, a political analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, said at the time.

Just before leaving the Senate, Thompson said too much time was spent on meaningless matters and partisan bickering. "On important stuff, where the interests are really dug in on both sides, it's extremely difficult to get anything done," Thompson had told AP at the time.

After retiring from the Senate, Thompson took a role as District Attorney Arthur Branch on the TV show "Law & Order" and also appeared occasionally in the same role on several of its spinoff series. In 2007, he portrayed President Ulysses S. Grant in the TV movie "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee."

In June 2002, Thompson married Jeri Kehn, a political and media specialist.

After retiring from politics, Thompson hosted a conservative radio talk show between 2009 and 2011 and became a TV advertising pitchman for a reverse mortgage financial company.


THOMPSON, Fred (Fred Dalton Thompson)
Born: 8/9/1942, Sheffield, Alabama, U.S.A.
Died: 11/1/2015, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.A.

Fred Thompson’s western – actor:
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (TV) – 2007 (President Ulysses S. Grant)

RIP William Byrd Wilkins

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A Twin Cities-connected actor has died

Star Tribune
By Rohan Preston
November 2, 2015

William Byrd Wilkins, an actor who was prominent in the Twin Cities in the 1990s before leaving to perform in Alaska, London and New York, has died after a battle with pancreatic cancer.

He succumbed at a hospice in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Oct. 31, not far from Louisburg, N.C., where he was born, according to family and friends. He was 50.

The youngest of seven children born to the late Herman Wilkins, who maintained athletic fields at Louisburg College, and health aide and factory worker Ruby Wilkins, the actor graduated from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1987, intending to have a career on stage and screen.

But there were not many opportunities to practice his craft and grow like he wished in his home state. Shortly after seeing Penumbra Theatre’s 1991 production of Sam Kelley’s “Pill Hill” at the National Black Theater Festival in Winston-Salem, N.C., he moved to the Twin Cities.

Wilkins quickly found roles at, among others, Pangea World and the old Cricket theaters. Then he got onstage at Penumbra.

“Byrd wanted to be a part of us but he wasn’t ready at first, so he studied and watched us for two years until he fit right in,” said theater founder Lou Bellamy, who directed Wilkins and acted alongside him in many shows at Penumbra.

Wilkins worked with Marion McClinton, James A. Williams, Ralph Remington, Sha Cage and a host of other Twin Cities personalities. His memorable roles at Penumbra include playing Boy Willie, a brother who wants to sell a family heirloom to fund a land-buying scheme, in August Wilson’s “The Piano Lesson.”

“He’s the best Boy Willie I’ve ever seen and August loved him too,” said Bellamy. “He had that physicality, that bulkiness, like Charles Dutton [who played the part on film] but more than that. Because Byrd had studied us, studied our style, he had the rhythms down and understood the give-and-go of jazz acting. Byrd was a really good dude.”

After leaving the Twin Cities, he performed in Alaska, New York and London. He also made appearances onscreen, playing a bouncer in the 1998 comedy “Overnight Delivery,” and a crack dealer in 2006 Wayne Cramer film, “Running Scared,” which starred Paul Walker.

He memorably played a preacher in an episode of the British science fiction series, “Dr. Who” titled "A Town Called Mercy."

At the end of his career, he returned to his home area. He taught drama at Louisburg College over the past few years, giving of himself and reaching out to friends even as his health failed. A few weeks before he died, Wilkins called Bellamy to thank him for the role he’d played in his career and life.

Wilkins is survived by his mother, Ruby H. Wilkins, sister Rosa W. Johnson and two brothers, Rev. Jordan Wilkins and Harry L. Wilkins, all of N.C. Funeral services will be held Saturday in Louisburg, N.C.

“He was my baby, and the fourth one to go,” Ruby Wilkins said Monday. “I loved to see him act onstage. He was always playing people we know, like his daddy or his brother or uncle. He was always bringing our family up there with him.”


WILKINS, William Byrd
Born: 1965 Louisburg, North Carolina, U.S.A.
Died: October 31, 2015, Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S.A.

William Byrd Wilkins’ western – actor:
Dr. Who: A Town Called Mercy (TV) – 2012 (preacher)

RIP Charles Herbert

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RIP Charles Herbert

Facebook
By Paul Peterson
November 3, 2015
 
Charles Herbert
Dec 23rd, 1948 to Oct. 31st, 2015

There are phone calls you wish you didn’t answer. One such came last night when Jerry Saperstein called to tell me his younger brother, Charlie, had passed away last Saturday of a sudden heart attack.

You may not know the name unless you’re a Sci-Fi fan. Here’s a few titles so you’ll remember Charlie Herbert; “The Fly.” “13 Ghosts.” “The Boy and the Pirates.” And, from 1957 when Charlie played Robert Winter, my younger brother in “Houseboat.”

It’s hard to lose a life-long friend. I had just talked to him last Wednesday. We were making plans to go to dinner in two weeks. Charlie was up-beat and positive, looking forward to his next Sci-Fi convention. Things were good for him in Las Vegas. As always we ended our conversation by saying I Love You. We always said that because you just never know.
I immediately told my wife, Rana, and then made just one phone call…to Mimi Gibson (Rahal) who was also in “Houseboat” and was a critical factor in helping us bring Charlie back from the brink many years ago.

Charlie was a poster child for the Kid Actor Syndrome. Look him up on IMDB. 20 movies, 50 television shows. He supported his entire family from Age Four…and then his career came to an emphatic end. His take? $1,700 when he became an adult.

Damaged goods? I’ll say.

My friend died sober, looking forward to the future. Was he “scorned and covered with scars?” Of course. So what. Charlie Herbert was a good man who gave far more than he got. He was grateful that he lived to get his modest pension from Screen Actors Guild. God, I’m going to miss him.


HERBERT, Charles (Charles Herbert Saperstein)
Born: 12/23/1948, Culver City, California, U.S.A.
Died: 10/31/2015, Las Vegas, Nevada U.S.A.

Charles Herbert’s westerns – actor:
Gun Glory – 1957 (boy)
Gunfight at the O.K. Coral – 1957 (Tommy Earp)
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1958 (Jimmy Reach)
Riverboat (TV) – 1959 (Paddy Saunders)
Klondike (TV) – 1960 (Seth Bailey)
Wichita Town (TV) – 1960 (Jed McCloud)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963 (Joseph Oliver, Job Bevins, Tad Hollisted, Wally,
      Nicko Rose)
Rawhide (TV) – 1962 (Jody)

RIP Adriana Campos

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Actress Adriana Campos Dead At 36: Mauricio Ochmann's Ex Dies In Car Accident In Colombia

Latin Times
By  Jessica Lucia Roi
November 3, 2015

Colombian Actress Adriana Campos and her husband Carlos Rincón have passed away in a tragic car accident Tuesday.

According to Noticias RCN, the couple was driving southwest of Colombia's Department of Antioquia when Rincón lost control of the automobile, causing the car to fall in río Cauca in jurisdicción de Bolombolo. Both bodies were taken to Salgar, Antioquia. The telenovela actress and her businessman partner leave behind their 1-year-old baby boy.

Campos, who passed away at 36 years old, was a two-time Premios TV y Novelas nominee. She was first nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Nicol Aguilar in "Vecinos" and received a second nomination for Best Antagonist as Pricila Cardona in "Bella Calamidades." In 2010, the actress from Chaparral, Colombia, dated actor Mauricio Ochmann, whom she worked with in the popular soap opera "El Clon." The former couple was expecting their first child together, but lost the baby due to complications, reports TV y Novelas.

Campos had a trajectory of 15 years, which not only included telenovelas, but also film, TV series and theater. May Adriana and Carlos rest in peace.


CAMPOS, Adriana
Born: 2/27/1979, Chaparral Tolima, Columbia
Died: 11/3/2015, Salgar, Antioquia, Columbia

Adriana Campos’ western – actress:
Zorro: La Espada y La Rosa (TV) – 2007 (Toypuinia/Regina)

RIP Rita Stetson

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RIP Rita Stetson

Newport News Daily Press
November 4, 2015

NEWPORT NEWS, VA - Rita Claire Johnson, 85, passed away Monday, November 2, 2015. She was a native of Lakewood, Ohio and was a resident of Burbank, CA before moving to Newport News in 2001. Rita was a film and television actress appearing in Judgement at Nuremberg, My Fair Lady, numerous Elvis Presley movies, Esther William's movies and Aqua Shows. Television work included Gunsmoke and I Love Lucy. She was a model for the Ford Modeling Agency and was Miss Yankee Stadium. Rita was preceded in death by her parents Raymond and Agnes Stetson and 2 brothers Robert and William Stetson. She is survived by her husband of 52 years, Edward Louis Johnson; a son Christopher Martin Johnson; a daughter Katie Kim Johnson Collins and her husband Kenneth; and 4 grandchildren, Cooper and Aaron Johnson and Kendra and Kaelan Collins. A private memorial service will be held in the chapel of Amory Funeral Home, Grafton. Memorial donations may be made to the Alzheimer's Association or the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.


STETSON, Rita (Rita Claire Stetson-Johnson)
Born: 1920, Lakewood, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died: 11/2/2015, Newport News, Virginia, U.S.A.

Rita Stetson’s westerns – actress:
Gunsmoke (TV) ?

RIP Tommy Overstreet

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RIP Tommy Overtstreet

Billboard
By Chuck Dauphin
November 3, 2015

Tommy Overstreet, the 1970s country hitmaker, died Monday night at his home in Oregon at age 78. The singer had been suffering from a variety of ailments for the past few years.

Fellow country star Rex Allen Jr. shared the news on Facebook:

Born Sept. 10, 1937, in Oklahoma City, the singer came by his talent naturally. His cousin Gene Austin (who he called his uncle) was a prominent entertainer starting in the 1920s. Overstreet recalled in a 2014 interview with Billboard, while promoting his book A Road Less Traveled, some important advice Austin gave him.

"My uncle told me that you had to sing from the heart and you had to have songs that touched and spoke to other people's hearts. That's what I tried to do with all of my songs. I tried to think about who I was singing to, and I wanted to touch their hearts."

Overstreet decided he wanted to try his hand at a similar career and began performing on Slim Willet's television series in Abilene, Texas, when he was 17. Soon thereafter, he formed a band called the Shadows.

Overstreet recorded at Norman Petty's studio in Clovis, N.M., as well as a New York session that included future Tonight Show band member Doc Severinsen on trumpet. Still, success as a recording artist eluded the singer. He moved to Nashville in 1967 to manage the Music City operations at Dot Records. Though he enjoyed his work, the singer never gave up his dreams of the stage, electing to become a recording artist for the label.

He first charted with 1969's "Rocking a Memory (That Won't Go to Sleep)," which peaked at No. 73 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart. It wouldn't take long for him to eclipse that peak, with 1971's "Gwen (Congratulations)" making it all the way to No. 5. That would be the first of 23 appearances in the top 40. His biggest hit was 1972's "Ann (Don't Go Runnin)," which narrowly missed the top of the chart, settling in at No. 2.

Overstreet's rich voice, combined with his muscular build and movie-star looks, helped propel him into the spotlight as a frequent guest on the top TV variety shows of the day, such as Hee Haw and The Midnight Special. His final appearance on the charts came in 1986 with "Next to You," which made it to No. 74.

In the late 1980s, the singer became one of the first country performers to base his operations in Branson, Mo., which became a haven for artists who still had devoted fanbases. He said it was love from the start.

"I had a friend who had moved there, and he said, 'Tommy, you've got to come see this place.' He had become a little disenchanted with Nashville. I fell in love with the area, and we lived there for about seven years."

It was a slower pace for the singer, who admitted that his fast pace of the 1970s might have cost him. "There were 329 one-nighters, then 36 days in Nashville in a year's time," he said. "I also recorded two albums and did a European tour for 18 days. Unfortunately, my ex-wife and I separated and divorced. The music business and what we do in that career is not great for relationships. You're gone too much. I wouldn't encourage anyone to work that hard. I shouldn't have. I should have stopped and smelled the roses and spent more time with my family. But you learn those things in hindsight. Hindsight is 20/20. As you go down this road, you do what you think is the best thing at the time, and I did. Unfortunately, it cost me some heartbreak and disappointments, but that's how life is."

Things ended on a happy note for the singer, who remarried and had two more children. "Life is dear to me," he said. "I've had a wonderful time, met some interesting people, and had some success along the way. I've had a blessed life, and I can't complain at all."

Arrangements for Overstreet's memorial services are pending.


OVERSTREET, Tommy (Thomas Cary Overstreet)
Born: 9/10/1937, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
Died: 11/2/2015, Hillsboro, Oregon, U.S.A.

Tommy Overstreet’s western – actor:
Face of Justice – 2008 (barkeep)

RIP Larry Delaney

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Larry Davis Delaney, 77

Daily Inter Lake
October 16, 2015

Larry Davis Delaney passed away peacefully on Sunday, Oct. 11, 2015, at his home in Whitefish, surrounded by family.

He was born Sept. 24, 1938, in Little Rock, Arkansas, to Evelyn P. Morgan and Charles Mims.

For those who knew him, Larry was “The Most Interesting Man Alive.” Raised by a Marine during World War II, he spent his youth traveling from Midway Island to the Carolinas before settling in Orange County, California.

After high school, he enlisted in the Navy where he drove submarines and was a UTD Frogman, a precursor to the Navy SEALS.

During his 20s, Larry was a deputy for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, trained guard dogs, and married and had his first child, Deborah. He worked for the Olympic Committee during the Mexico Olympics before moving to Los Angeles in the mid-‘60s to pursue a writing career at an entertainment trade journal.

He eventually became the magazine’s editor but was courted by Capitol Records where he became the head of press relations, working intimately with The Beatles, The Beach Boys and Glen Campbell among others.  Earning the camaraderie of The Beatles, he became integral in helping them launch their independent label Apple Records. 

At the dawn of the ‘70s, Larry’s savvy PR skills were noticed by the White House and he successfully helped spearhead Richard Nixon’s re-election campaign.

He returned to the entertainment industry but this time as an actor, starring in such television shows and films as “Brian’s Song,” “West World,” “Gunsmoke,” “The Six Million Dollar Man,” and “Mayberry” where Larry met and married TV star Arlene Golonka. He also appeared in “The Streets of San Francisco,” acting alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger. But his most prominent acting role was as Jay Livingston on the iconic soap opera “Days of our Lives.”

In between acting gigs, Larry penned New York Times best-selling novels “Blood Red Wine,” “Triton Ultimatum,” “Sea Ranch,” “Blood Harvest,” as well as “No Sympathy for the Devil” under the pseudonym Fredrick Snow.

It was at this time he rekindled an old romance with and married Mary (Hart) Delaney, whom he had briefly dated during his Capitol Records days. When she became unexpectedly pregnant and gave birth to a baby boy, they decided to give up the city life and moved to an old log cabin in Whitefish.

Larry put his vast skills to good use, working for Big Mountain Ski Resort’s marketing department where he teamed up with Doug Betters of the Miami Dolphins to form the Doug Betters Winter Classic.

Over the years, Larry worked for such local innovative companies as Applied Information Services, CyberPort, one of the first Internet providers in Montana, and Silicon Valley-based semiconductor company Integrated Materials.

Upon retirement, Larry spent his twilight years beekeeping, writing and mentoring his son Morgan in the art of storytelling.

Larry is survived by daughters, Elizabeth Phillips, Deb Puckett, Kim DeGeer and Jennifer Clemente; son, Morgan Delaney; brother, Bill Mims; and granddaughters, Meghan Walker, Kristen Walker and Jenna Lee Walker.

A celebration of life will be held for Larry from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18, at the Bohemian Hall, 125 Blanchard Lake Road, behind Montana Coffee Traders in Whitefish.


DELANEY, Larry (Larry Davis Delaney)
Born: 9/24/1938, Little Rock, Arkansas, U.S.A.
Died: 10/11/2015, Whitefish, Montana, U.S.A.

Larry Delaney’s westerns – actor:
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1972 (Ray Hutson)
Westworld – 1973 (technician) 
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